INDIANAPOLIS – Indiana legislators have introduced bills to help the states riverboat casinos hold onto business in the face of growing competition from casinos in neighboring states.
The bills would allow the casinos to move from the boats onto land, reduce their taxes and lift game restrictions on some. A question, however, is whether any can win approval from lawmakers leery about being perceived as expanding gambling.
Indiana expects a 15 percent drop in the tax revenues from its 13 casinos, from the $614 million it collected last year to about $520 million for the 2015 budget year. State officials blame the decline in part on the opening of new casinos in neighboring states.
Everyone is focusing on dollars but what were talking about at the end of the day are thousands of Hoosier jobs, said Mike Smith, president of the Casino Association of Indiana. Our industry for the last many, many years operated in a controlled competitive environment. Today, thats no longer so much controlled with the expansion going on.
A state Senate committee is scheduled to take up a bill Wednesday that would eliminate the riverboat admissions tax and replace it with an additional tax on casino revenues.
Sen. Phil Boots, R-Crawfordsville, the bills sponsor, said the changes are needed to keep Indianas casinos in the game.
Its going to be a hit to the state revenue, but if it makes them more competitive and we get more participation in the state then it should offset, Boots said. But if we dont do it and they arent competitive, then we are going to lose continually to the surrounding areas.
Smith said he didnt know how much money the changes would save the casinos, and legislative staffers havent yet completed an estimate on the potential effect on revenue.
Other provisions of Boots bill would allow the states 10 riverboat casinos – five on the Ohio River and five on Lake Michigan – to move to property next to their docks and drop a ban on live table games, such as blackjack and roulette, at the horse track casinos in Anderson and Shelbyville. Only electronic gambling machines are allowed at the tracks.
A bill from Sen. Ed Charbonneau, R-Valparaiso, would let Majestic Star casino in Gary move from its dock along Lake Michigan to a spot in the city, a change Gary leaders have sought for several years.
The legislation got a cool reception from Rep. Bill Davis, R-Portland, chairman of the House Public Policy Committee, which would likely handle it. He expressed concern about moving casinos from locations endorsed by voters in local referendums.
Charbonneau said action is needed because Indianas casinos are under attack and the prospects for the Lake Michigan casinos will only get worse if Illinois officials allow casinos in Chicago.
We havent even felt any effect from Chicago, he said. We have our head in the sand if we dont think thats coming.